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Posts Tagged ‘Colombia’

How Progressive traitors are dealt with in Colombia

by Phantom Ace ( 4 Comments › )
Filed under Columbia, Communism, Headlines, Progressives, Tranzis at August 21st, 2011 - 12:03 am

In Colombia there is zero tolerance for Progressive traitors. Many Colombian Leftists have ties to Hugo Chavez or the FARC. These Colombian Progressives get positive publicity by the Global Press for there treasonous connections. Despite that, they are despised by many in the Colombian public. Usually Rightwing Ex AUC members take matters into their own hands.

Colombian peace campaigner and former Senator Piedad Cordoba has left the country after receiving death threats.

She has negotiated the release of a number of hostages held by the Farc guerrilla group, but the government accused her of helping the rebels.

She was banned from public office for 18 years

[….]

Ms Cordoba has in the past expressed fears that supporters of former Colombian president Alvaro Uribe may target her.

There has been a high-profile and public rift between the two politicians for years.

Ms Cordoba has been a staunch critic of Mr Uribe’s security policies. She accused the armed forces of human rights abuses and collaboration with illegal right-wing paramilitaries.

Mr Uribe has been highly critical of Ms Cordoba’s links with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

Good riddance to her. I support any measures Colombians do to maintain a strong country and keep the Bolivarian Progressives at bay.

After a near national death experience in the 90’s, Colombians will prveent any traitor assisting the enemies. Colombians don’t play.

Bogota Colombia is now one of the top 15 new business cities

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Columbia, Economy, Headlines at July 12th, 2011 - 9:33 pm

Colombia has come a long way since the Anarchy of the 1990’s. It’s capital Bogota has been listed by Fortune magazine as one of the top 15 new business cities.

The presence of multinational companies, such as Citibank and McDonalds, as well as a the availability of a skilled workforce, solid infrastructure and potential customers, has led to Bogota’s new ranking.

According to a review on the magazine’s website, “A World Bank study recently ranked Colombia No. 2 in Latin America for entrepreneurs (it takes just days to incorporate a company) but large multinationals like Bogota too: Citibank and McDonald’s have set up there, and call centers serving the world are proliferating in the city. Why? Colombians speak clear, unaccented Spanish.

As some who has Colombian relatives and Spaniard relatives, I can confirm. Colombians speak the best Spanish in Latin America. In fact some of the regions in Colombia sound identical to Spain Spanish.

Congrats to Colombia, they are a rising nation and will be a regional power house in the future. We should cultivate this relationship.

Latin American nations having 2nd thoughts on UN Palestinian statehood vote

by Phantom Ace ( 7 Comments › )
Filed under Dhimmitude, Headlines, Islamic Supremacism, Israel, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Mexico, Palestinians, United Nations, Venezuela at June 12th, 2011 - 11:04 pm

Several Latin American nations had recognize a fictitious Palestinian state. This was the work of the Obama Regime and their Brazilian allies. Even Pro-Israel nations like Chile and Peru recognized a Palestine. However, unlike the other countries, they didn’t recognize the 67 borders and said that the borders should be determined by negotiations favorable to Israel. Colombia refuses to recognize a Palestinian state and might even sue that entity should it arises. The PLO trained the FARC in the 70’s and 80’s, so the Colombians have a grudge. Now they are having 2nd thoughts for a variety of reasons and may not back a Palestinian statehood vote at the UN.

A majority of the 35 countries in Latin America are either against recognition of a Palestinian state at the UN in September, or are having second thoughts, Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said Sunday.

Ayalon, who returned over the weekend from attending an Organization of American States (OAS) meeting in El Salvador, told The Jerusalem Post “we certainly stopped the [Palestinian] momentum in Latin America.”
Among the countries which are not expected to support the PA move at the UN in September are Jamaica, Belize, Guyana, Suriname, Panama, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Colombia.

Ayalon began his trip in Mexico, which is among the most influential countries in Latin America, along with Brazil and Argentina, and which has been the focus of intensive Palestinian efforts to get them to recognize a Palestinian state even before the UN vote – as all of South America – with the exception of Colombia, has done.

The only reason the Palestinians go any sympathy was because some of these countries are under 3rd World Liberation governments. Also, Israel had not  cultivated ties with these nations. Clearly realizing this, they sent Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon t0 the OAS meeting and he was able to change some minds.

Israel needs to keep this momentum going and continue cultivating ties with the Latin American nations. Colombia is right now theie closest ally. Using that alliance can open doors to other Latin countries. Unlike the Arabs, Israel has much to offer these nations. As a person with part of my roots in Latin America, I have more in common with an Israeli than an Arab Muslim. I hope these nations do the right thing and don’t reward Arab aggression.

Colombia, the new South American powerhouse

by Phantom Ace ( 29 Comments › )
Filed under Columbia, Economy, World at July 19th, 2010 - 8:30 am

Colombia is the unsung miracle story of the early 21st century. The nation was on the verge of collapse 10 years ago. The Totalitarian Progressive FARC guerrillas controlled parts of the country. Only the Rightwing Militia, the AUC, prevented the fall of this nation to the Left.

In 2002, Alvaro Uribe came into power and turned the situation around. He integrated most of the AUC fighters into the Colombian armed forces and pursued free market policies. He took the fight to the FARC and stared Chavez down. Colombia is now has a growing economy and a well trained army thanks to Israeli trainers. Israel is that nations closest ally, even more so than the Obama regime. It is the greatest story never told.

In a time of emerging-market juggernauts, Colombia gets little notice. Its $244 billion economy is only the fifth-largest in Latin America, a trifle next to Brazil, the $2 trillion regional powerhouse. Yet against all odds Colombia has become the country to watch in the hemisphere. In the past eight years the nation of 45 million has gone from a crime- and drug-addled candidate for failed state to a prospering dynamo. The once sluggish economy is on a roll. Oil and gas production are surging, and Colombia’s MSCI index jumped 15 percent between January and June, more than any other stock market this year.

This is more than a bull run. Since 2002, foreign direct investment has jumped fivefold (from $2 billion to $10 billion), while GDP per capita has doubled, to $5,700. The society that once was plagued by car bombs, brain drain, and capital flight is now debating how to avoid “Dutch disease,” the syndrome of too much foreign cash rolling in. Stable, booming, and democratic, Colombia has increasingly become “a bright star in the Latin American constellation,” as emerging-market analyst Walter Molano of BCP Securities calls it. Michael Geoghegan, CEO of HSBC, recently picked Colombia as a leader of a nascent block of midsize powers, the CIVETS (after the smallish, tree-dwelling cat), which stands for Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey, and South Africa. “These are the new BRICs,” he said.

Read the rest: Colombia Becomes the New Star of the South

Thanks to the security achievements it is now a place for tourism. The Caribbean coast has great beaches that many know about. The President elect, Juan Manuel Santos, is now planning to lower taxes and attract more investments. Colombia is a success story and one that should be told.